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Darius43

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Everything posted by Darius43

  1. I used Airfix Mk2d coaches for conversion to the Manchester Pullman coaches a few years ago. From memory the chassis has tabs at each end that engage in slots in the plastic corridor connectors. There are also clips on the chassis sides that engage in tabs on the window glazing strips. To remove the chassis you need to remove the corridor connectors and pry the coach body sides away from the chassis so as to disengage the tabs. Cheers Darius
  2. Bought from UK model shops 😀 Thing is, I don’t model O Gauge 😳 Cheers Darius
  3. Going by previous posts on this thread the products in question are Dapol O Gauge steam locos from a seller based in China. Cheers Darius
  4. Probably little chance of redress in China. It comes down to the morality of the purchaser. Buy cheap from the eBay seller, telling yourself that is ok to do so because it’s Dapol’s fault for manufacturing in China, or buy from legitimate traders. The analogy is buying knock off goods from a bloke in a pub car park. Cheers Darius
  5. Actually it is - the eBay sellers are based in China as stated on their eBay pages. There is a similar issue about Murphy Models Irish locos being sold on eBay directly from China. Cheers Darius
  6. That 44 looks superb. Very well done!!! Cheers Darius
  7. Quite right. I have been involved in a lot of work at Heathrow in the past 30 years. The older terminals T1 and T2 had restrictions on the allowable floor loading which made successive refurbishments “interesting”. This shouldn’t be as much of an issue with the new terminals T5 and T2 although the floor structure capacity will still need to be checked. Furthermore you can’t just take out 50% of your search lanes in one go or the passengers will be slightly more vexed than Michael above. Cheers Darius
  8. Some rtr 1:18 GT40s… …and a slightly smaller one. Cheers Darius
  9. Assuming that the photo shows the total number of parts that you have, the side illustration on the printed card gives a useful guide. - The sides go together with the cabs at the outer ends. - The cab fronts go on the front. - The three roof parts go on top: the rightmost roof part in the photo is the central one; the other two are on each end with the sloped edge being the cab end. The plastic bogies shown in the photo are coach bogies (possibly Lima) and will be of no use as the axle centres won’t match those of the cast white metal bogie sides provided with the kit. Does your kit come with a chassis or are those the only parts that you have? Cheers Darius
  10. Just received the email at 20.01. 1/10 - could do better. Darius
  11. Good for you, Phil. Looks like the roof and sides are pressed aluminium sheet and the ends are white metal, which is an MTK construction type. MTK often supplied decals for the door edges. MTK usually made the roof and sides from one continuous sheet rather than three separate parts though. Cheers Darius
  12. Looks like an LMS BG to me Rather than a 4-EPB “centre coach”. Cheers Darius
  13. Meanwhile, somewhere near Baltimore… Cheers Darius
  14. As you may be able to see if you bother to read the thread from the beginning, this thread does interest me. I occasionally comment on aspects of engineering or things I don’t agree with, as so, it would appear, do you. Cheers Darius
  15. Especially the examples of narrowboat handling compared to that of the container ship ‘cause they’re essentially the same, right? Cheers Darius
  16. For some passengers that may not be a positive outcome… Cheers Darius
  17. Tuned in to get the latest thoughts on the bridge and instead get:- - hatred of the BBC - hatred of journalism - a brief history of friendly fire Time for a thread lock I think until the big crane starts its act. Darius
  18. Do they fit inside the tunnels this time? Cheers Darius
  19. Concrete dolphin protection to the piers of the first Forth Road Bridge. They don’t need to absorb all the energy of a ship impact as some of it goes into buckling the ship’s hull and some in deflecting it’s trajectory. Darius
  20. 200 tons of TNT detonating does impart the energy a bit faster than a ship impact. The key parameter is the “impulse” which essentially is how quickly the energy is imparted into whatever is receiving it. For example, I could give you a push on the arm or a punch. Both impart the same energy but the push is slower and the punch much faster. The punch hurts… Darius
  21. Actually a stretch of the ramps also collapsed. Graphic courtesy of today’s Guardian. Darius
  22. The concrete pier of the Baltimore bridge was the part struck by the ship and it collapsed causing loss of support to the steel bridge structure and its subsequent progressive collapse. In the still from the NTSB footage below you can see parts of the collapsed reinforced concrete pier structure to one side and actually on top of the bow of the ship. Darius
  23. The Dartford Crossing (QE2) bridge piers look to have substantial protection. They are also close to the river bank so may be in shallower water than the main navigable channel. Cheers Darius
  24. I know you are joking but even RB wouldn’t want a driver that would most likely stuff the car into a wall during practice/quali/the race. Cheers Darius
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